People and businesses that buy car parts near you generally fall into a few clear categories, and you can usually find several options within a short drive.

Main types of buyers

  • Local junkyards and “cash for cars” lots that buy whole cars (running or not) mainly for scrap metal and usable parts.
  • Self-service salvage yards (you-pull-it style) that buy junk or damaged cars, then resell individual parts to the public.
  • Independent mechanics and small repair shops that sometimes buy good used parts cheap if they fit common vehicles in your area.
  • Hobbyists and tuners (via Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, local forums) who hunt for specific performance or rare parts.
  • Metal recyclers/scrap yards that pay mostly by weight, best for heavy or badly worn items like rotors, exhausts, or entire shells.

How to quickly find them

  1. Search phrases like “sell junk car near me”, “junkyard that buys cars near me”, or “salvage yard cash for cars” in maps or search apps.
  1. Check large chains’ sites to find locations close by (some buy whole cars, some only sell parts):
    • Pull-A-Part and similar salvage chains.
 * Nearby used-parts dismantlers or auto recyclers listed in guides on “where to buy car parts near me”.
  1. For individual parts in good condition, list them on:
    • Local marketplace apps and online classifieds.
    • Brand‑specific or local car forums where enthusiasts often buy used parts.

Getting the best deal

  • Whole car vs. individual parts: A junkyard pays fast for the whole car, but parting it out yourself (wheels, stereo, body panels, engine accessories) usually nets more money over time.
  • Condition and documentation: Clean parts, photos in good light, and knowing what they fit (year, make, model, engine) make buyers more confident and raise offers.
  • Convenience vs. price:
    • Tow‑away junk car buyers and scrap yards = fastest, lower payout.
    • Selling piece‑by‑piece online or to enthusiasts = slower, higher payout if the parts are desirable.

What to do next (simple checklist)

  1. Decide if you want to sell a whole car or just loose parts.
  2. Look up “junkyard / auto recycler / cash for cars near me” and call 2–3 places for quotes (ask if they offer free towing).
  1. For higher‑value items (alloy wheels, aftermarket exhaust, performance parts, newer headlights), photograph them and post them on local marketplace sites and forums.
  2. Keep your vehicle title handy if you’re selling an entire car; most licensed buyers will need it.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.